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'Game of Thrones' earns a leading 19 Emmy nods
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LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Emmy voters may need to steel themselves to
sort through this year's top nominees: a macabre, medieval-style tale; a
meth kingpin and his violent downfall; a bleak mystery about detectives
tracking a ritual killer, and a heartbreaking saga of the AIDS
epidemic's roots.
Small-screen fare has
steadily been pushed into bolder, even brilliant territory by cable and,
now, online offerings, and it's enticing the TV academy to recognize
programs that are more emotionally and dramatically complex - as well as
sexually explicit and, for better or worse, much more violent.
In
this widely proclaimed golden age of television-plus, the brutal
fantasy saga "Game of Thrones," based on the work of novelist George
R.R. Martin, emerged Thursday as the leading nominee with 19 nods.
Dramas "Breaking Bad" and "True Detective" and movie "The Normal Heart"
are among the other front-runners.
That's just
for starters. The self-evidently titled "American Horror Story: Coven,"
along with "Fargo," a riff on the black comedy film of the same name,
are provocative miniseries hopefuls for the awards airing on NBC in
August.
The academy's broadening embrace
includes individual performers as well. They gay rights group GLAAD
saluted Laverne Cox's guest-actress nod for "Orange is the New Black" as
the first for an openly transgender person.
Emmy
has welcomed change before, giving a best-drama award to breakthrough
1980s police drama "Hill Street Blues" for its unprecedented grit and
honesty. But it took four tries for "Breaking Bad," one of the most
lavishly praised TV series ever but with an anti-hero at its center, to
capture a best drama trophy. It won last year.
Whether
21st-century voters will go far enough to crown "Game of Thrones" with
the top drama award is an intriguing question. With the exception of
"Lost," shows that fall within the fantasy and sci-fi genres have fallen
short, although they have reaped other awards such as Peter Dinklage's
2011 supporting actor award for "Game of Thrones." He's nominated again
this year.
"Voters like shows that feel more
real and important in terms of today's social or political topics," said
Tom O'Neil, author of "The Emmys" and organizer of the Gold Derby
awards website.
The best drama contenders
besides the nicknamed "GOT" are "Breaking Bad," "Downton Abbey," "House
of Cards," "Mad Men" and "True Detective."
Netflix's
political thriller "House of Cards," which made a breakthrough last
year as the first online series nominated for a major award, has the
chance again at Emmy victory. The prison-set "Orange is the New Black,"
also from Netflix, leaped that barrier on the flip side this time around
with a bid for best comedy series, along with a nod for star Taylor
Schilling.
Also competing for best comedy
honors are "The Big Bang Theory," "Louie," "Silicon Valley," "Veep," and
"Modern Family," a four-time winner that has the chance to tie
"Frasier" as the all-time winning sitcom with one more award.
There
were so many such candidates for the six best drama slots that the
critically acclaimed "Masters of Sex" and "The Good Wife" were among
those that failed to make the cut. For the latter, coming off a daring
season in which a major character died, the snub provoked a flood of
online fan dismay.
It may be time for the
Emmys to follow cousin Oscar, which has expanded its best picture
category to encompass up to 10 nominees.
The
66th prime-time Emmy Awards ceremony certainly will have big-screen star
power to spare. This year's Academy Awards best-actor winner Matthew
McConaughey ("Dallas Buyers Club") and nominee Chiwetel Ejiofor ("12
Years a Slave") are both nominees for TV projects, as are past Oscar
winners, including Julia Roberts, Jane Fonda and Billy Bob Thornton.
McConaughey
and "True Detective" co-star Harrelson both will vie for best drama
actor honors, along with four-time winner Cranston for "Breaking Bad,"
Jon Hamm for "Mad Men," Kevin Spacey for "House of Cards," and Jeff
Daniels for "The Newsroom," who won the Emmy last year.
Nominees
in the lead actress drama category are last year's winner, "Homeland"
star Claire Danes along with Lizzy Caplan for "Masters of Sex," Michelle
Dockery for "Downton Abbey," Julianna Margulies for "The Good Wife,"
Kerry Washington for "Scandal" and Robin Wright for "House of Cards."
The
66th Primetime Emmy Awards will air Monday, Aug. 25, on NBC, with emcee
Seth Meyers, the former "Saturday Night Live" player and new NBC
late-night host. The ceremony, traditionally held on Sunday, was moved
to avoid a conflict with NBC's "Sunday Night Football" and with MTV's
Video Music Awards.
HBO received a leading 99
nominations, followed by CBS with 47; NBC, 46; FX Networks, 45; ABC, 37;
PBS, 34; AMC, 26; Netflix, 31; Showtime, 24; Comedy Central, 21;
Lifetime, 17, and Fox, 18.
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Online: http://www.emmys.com
---
Lynn
Elber is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. She
can be reached at lelber(at)ap.org and on Twitter at http://twitter.com/lynnelber .
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Putting my experiences of Life In NYC in a more personal perspective, and checking in with international/national, tech and some other news
Translation from English
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Game of Thrones and The Emmys- WNYC
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